Perspectives
Dir. Gaziz Nasyrov
Certain year of the 2000s. A
journalist of some big paper, Tamerlan finds himself tied to a battery
in some basement premise, after he was taken and kept hostage by
mysterious group of men in black masks with eye holes. Tamerlan is
instinctively preparing himself to lie about anything that he can be
asked about. He tries to recall of the biased articles he has written
recently, but can’t remember anything that could possible lead to this
situation. Meanwhile, his capturers come to him and, using knocks and
pastes, motivate him to make a virtual trip in time, going back to the
eve of 2000 – the days, when Tamerlan and four other students of the
philosophy department have just graduated and have been thinking what to
next with their lives.
Two of these characters decide to move
forward (one, focusing on his career, and the other – on his family),
the only girl in the company also makes an ultimate decision – but in
another direction – and commits suicide. And there are only Tamerlan and
Kostya Paniotis who literally get stuck at some point of time and
space. Having stayed in students’ dormitory, empty at summer days, they
decide to rent a free room by the hour. Their clients, who altogether
symbolize the sum of all human misfortunes and loneliness, are often
paying with valuable effects, which young philosophers call “adequations
of time”. Time here is really the protagonist of the film, that submits
the whole aesthetics of it – starting from specific, slate-grey colors
of the film and ending with the voice-over, which – in a style of Julio
Cortázar – is read from the second person and in future tense. Time is
also the general theme of young philosophers’ conversations (in one
episode Kostya manages to explain the theory of the forth dimension
while getting drunk with his friend). And they are philosophers for a
reason, which is to show their double revery: not only they represent
the generation lost between two epochs, between the past and the present
of the country, but they are also graduated in such rare and
unfortunate specialty, which never occurs to be profession – only the
state of mind. And non-linear structure of the film finally builds up to
be universal model of human memory that always functions like that –
with random pieces of memories suddenly coming up in mind. And all of
the film’s “magical realism”, that subtly suggests that student
dormitory can symbolize a kind of a limbo, turns out be quite natural in
the system given. All of the important events have already taken place
in the past. Time is ruthlessly sweeping away everything that stands in
its way, and a person can sometimes find himself at the point of
crossing of two time lines. In Stephen King’s novel creates called
Langoliers came in such cases, literally swallowing yesterday away; it
is not a hard job to believe that sometimes this function can be easily
performed by a few man in black masks.
Olga Artemieva
28-06-2011
Gakku
Published in
Festivals